Key events
28 min: James whips in a cross from the right. Cucurella rises in the middle, six yards out, but can’t plant the nut on the ball. Anything on that, and it was surely a goal. But just too high for the full-back.
27 min: The pace slows somewhat. Beau Dure is unlikely to be impressed: “I note that it’s 92 degrees F, with a ‘feels like’ of 98. That’s practically fall for us Southerners. I expect every player to cover at least 12 kilometers today.”
25 min: James clatters into Schjelderup as the Benfica man probes down the left. Schjelderup loses a boot. The referee has a quick word with Chelsea’s captain, but nothing more. Then from the resulting free kick, Di Maria tries to embarrass Sanchez with a looping shot from the sideline. A bit over-ambitious, even for a player as good as Di Maria. Sanchez plucks it from the sky without fuss.
23 min: Di Maria brings down a long ball with a feathery touch, then sets about twisting Cucurella’s blood down the right. But the flag pops up for offside. Chelsea breathe a sigh of relief, because Di Maria was surely going to slip past his man and cause all sorts of bother in the box.
21 min: Chelsea are getting closer and closer. Now Palmer has a go from a tight angle on the left. He belts it hard, but Trubin tips it around the post with a strong hand. Nothing comes of the corner.
19 min: Florentino over-elaborates in the midfield and is stripped by Lavia, who sets Delap off down the right. Delap cuts back for Cucurella, who takes a touch on the penalty spot, opens his body, and curls towards the top right. The shot’s good, but Silva has positioned himself on the line and heads off it! Wonderful football from Chelsea.
18 min: A cross comes into the Benfica box from the left. Neto heads down for Fernandez, whose attempt to sweep goalwards is blocked by Otamendi. That’s a crucial intervention, and nothing comes of the resulting corner.
16 min: Lavia has the opportunity to release Cucurella on goal down the inside-left channel. But he overcooks the long pass, which flies out for a goal kick. As quarterbacking in this stadium goes, it’s more Jimmy Clausen than Cam Newton.
14 min: Cucurella, who would miss any quarter-final if booked tonight, comes through the back of Di Maria and is fairly fortunate not to go into the referee’s notepad.
13 min: Cucurella makes good down the left but his cut-back rolls behind Palmer in the middle. The wing-back had enough time to do better. Benfica go up the other end, and James takes liberties when shielding a ball weakly rolling back towards Sanches. Schjelderup nearly nips in, but there’s just enough energy in the ball for it to reach the keeper.
12 min: Badiashile dallies on the ball 30 yards from his own goal, and is stripped by Pavlidis. The defender’s fortunate that Colwill steps in to get in Pavlidis’s road. That could have been very costly.
10 min: Fernandez links up with Neto down the right, and sends a cross through the six-yard box. Nobody there to poke home. Cucurella and Palmer then combine down the left, but the latter’s low cross is smothered by Trubin. Chelsea are on top.
8 min: … nothing occurs. A short-taken waste.
7 min: Neto probes at speed down the right again. He knocks the ball past Dahl and backs himself in a footrace. He doesn’t quite win the race … but he does win a corner off the defender. From which …
5 min: … so having said that, Benfica show in attack themselves for the first time, Di Maria and Aursnes combining down the right. The latter can’t get the ball under control in the Chelsea box, and the flag goes up for offside anyway. But it’s a nice open start to this game.
3 min: Fernandez goes long again. Delap chases down the middle. He looks second best to Silva, but then turns on the jets and nearly overtakes the defender. Silva does just enough to shoulder Delap off the ball before the striker can take a shot, but the danger signs were flashing for Benfica once more. And we’ve hardly started. Chelsea will be delighted with this.
2 min: … so Benfica slow it down with a bit of passing around at the back.
43 seconds: Chelsea are immediately on the front foot, Neto chasing after a long pass down the right. He makes it all the way into the box, and whips a shot towards the bottom right. Trubin parries and claims, albeit in a slightly clumsy style. There’s an early statement, then.
Ten, nine, eight, seven, etc., … and then Benfica get the ball rolling. It’s hot in North Carolina, but there’s a breeze at least.
The players take to the pitch. They come out one by one, just as they did during the group stages. But these are the knockouts, surely it’s time to take the showmanship up a notch? Could the teams be persuaded to come out high-kicking like the Tiller Girls at the start of Sunday Night at the London Palladium? If Fifa are hell-bent on this ersatz showbiz glamour, they may as well go all-in. Latest score: Val Parnell 1, Gianni Infantino 0. Anyway, Benfica are in red, Chelsea blue. We’ll be off once the pre-match admin has been completed.
Enzo Maresca speaks to DAZN. “We are very motivated … to do our best and win the game … hopefully we can do that … when you play in this competition every three days … hopefully they can be fresh … very happy for Liam Delap … very happy for the team … hopefully he can score again today … Benfica are a very good team … they have some very good players … it will be a tough game.”
Benfica manager Bruno Lage talks to DAZN. “There are two ways to be confident … one is about the work we do every day … the other one comes from [the Bayern win] … our target was to go through the first stage … everything is possible … we believe it is 50-50 … belief … aggressive … win duels … strategy … we believe we can beat Chelsea … we are a top team.”
The prize on offer tonight is a quarter-final tie with Palmeiras in Philadelphia next Friday. Palmeiras won an epic stand-off with fellow Brazilians Botafogo earlier this afternoon; Rob Smyth tells that story in the time-honoured minute-by-minute style.
Chelsea make seven changes to the team that started the easy win over Espérance Tunis. Robert Sánchez, Marc Cucurella, Levi Colwill, Pedro Neto, Cole Palmer, Moisés Caicedo and captain Reece James are back; Filip Jörgensen, Tosin Adarabioyo, Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall, Josh Acheampong, Malo Gusto, Noni Madueke and Christopher Nkunku drop to the bench. Enzo Fernández, Roméo Lavia, Benoît Badiashile and Liam Delap are the only players to remain in the starting XI. There, that’s everyone mentioned.
Benfica make just two changes after their 1-0 win over Bayern Munich. Orkun Kökçü and Florentino replace Gianluca Prestianni and Renato Sanches, who drop to the bench. Their starting line-up includes a couple of Premier League old boys in the shape of Nicolas Otamendi and Angel Di Maria, once of Manchesters City and United respectively, while they’re managed by former Wolves boss Bruno Lage.
The teams
Benfica: Trubin, Aursnes, Dahl, Antonio Silva, Otamendi, Florentino, Barreiro, Kokcu, Pavlidis, Di Maria, Schjelderup.
Subs: Ferreira, Carreras, Bajrami, Wynder, Santos, Oliveira, Prioste, Rego, Veloso, Luis, Bruma, Belotti, Akturkoglu, Gouveia, Prestianni.
Chelsea: Sanchez, James, Cucurella, Badiashile, Colwill, Caicedo, Palmer, Lavia, Fernandez, Pedro Neto, Delap.
Subs: Slonina, Penders, Adarabioyo, Chalobah, Gusto, Sarr, Anselmino, Acheampong, Dewsbury-Hall, Essugo, Santos, Nkunku, Madueke, Guiu, George.
Referee: Slavko Vincic (Slovenia).
Preamble
If history is any guide, we might as well anoint Chelsea the winners of this tie right now and be done with it. The victors obvious. An early night. Let’s go to bed. Because not only do Chelsea have a 100-percent record against Benfica, three wins out of three, the most notable of which being this Rafa-infused banger in 2013 …
… but there’s the ghost of Béla Guttmann to consider as well. Benfica are famously doomed abroad, having denied their two-time winning European Cup manager a pay rise in 1962, forcing him to spit as he stormed out of the exit door: “Not in a hundred years from now will Benfica ever win a European Cup!” Oh Béla. Oh Benfica. They’ve played eight major European finals since, one of them being the aforementioned Benitez-flavoured failure, and lost the lot. This isn’t a club with the wind behind when it comes to tournaments like this.
But then, this is not Europe. So perhaps the Club World Cup is the perfect platform upon which to snap their miserable international run. And their tails will be up after beating Bayern Munich on Tuesday. Only problem is, upwardly mobile Chelsea are still high on life after their Conference League success, so will fancy their chances of making it four from four against the Eagles of Lisbon, one step closer to repeating their success in a tournament they first won just three years ago. Neither team is perfect, so this is set up nicely. Kick-off at the home of the Carolina Panthers is at 9pm UK time, 4pm local. It’s on! Keep pounding!